Esimerkkilauseet

*: Perhaps as startling as the sheer toll was the devastation to some of the state’s well-known locales. Boardwalks along the beach in Seaside Heights, Belmar and other towns on the Jersey Shore were blown away. Amusement parks, arcades and restaurants all but vanished. Bridges to barrier islands buckled, preventing residents from even inspecting the damage to their property.

: It is amazing that he has never buckled after so many years of doing such urgent work.

*: The Dutch, as high as they seem, do begin to buckle.

*: The bishop was as able and ready to buckle with the Lord Protector as he was with him.

*: In single combat thou shalt buckle with me.

*: To make our sturdy humour buckle thereto.

*: Before buckling to my winters work.

*: Cartwright buckled himself to the employment.

: rfquotek|Knight

*: earlocks in tight buckles on each side of a lantern face

*: lets his wig lie in buckle for a whole half year

*: Gainst nature armed by gravity, / His features too in buckle see.

: rfquotek|Sir Walter Scott

*: He rubbed his hands together. "Believe it or not, there was a time when I considered giving acting a go. What do you think, Miss Fox?" He flexed impressive biceps. "Would I have had a chance against the Schwarzeneggers and the Chuck Norris types?"

*: I do set my bow in the cloud.

: The musician bowed his violin expertly.

: The shelf bowed under the weight of the books.

*: We bow things the contrary way, to make them come to their natural straightness.

*: The whole nation bowed their necks to the worst kind of tyranny.

*: Adversities do more bow mens minds to religion.

*: not to bow and bias their opinions

: Cronenberg’s "Cosmopolis" bows in Cannes this week.

*: The soldier now blew upon a green whistle, and at once a young girl, dressed in a pretty green silk gown, entered the room. She had lovely green hair and green eyes, and she bowed low before Dorothy as she said, "Follow me and I will show you your room."

: ux|en|That singer always bows towards her audience for some reason.

*: SCP recently announced that How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical will bow on the newly renovated stage next December.

*: I wrapt my selfe in Palmers weed, / And cast to seeke him forth through daunger and great dreed.

*: The cloister...had, I doubt not, been cast for [an orange-house].

: ux|en|The director cast the part carefully.

: ux|en|The director cast John Smith as King Lear.

: ux|en|to cast about for reasons

*: She...cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be.

*: The government I cast upon my brother.

*: Cast thy burden upon the Lord.

: ux|en|to be cast in damages

*: She was cast to be hanged.

*: Were the case referred to any competent judge, they would inevitably be cast.

: ux|en|a casting voice

*: How much interest casts the balance in cases dubious!

*: The threat of Russian barbarism sweeping over the free world will cast its ominous shadow over us for many, many years.

*: A sudden thought cast a gloom over his countenance.

*: being with childe, they may without feare of accusation, spoyle and cast transterm|avorter|lang=frm their children, with certaine medicaments, which they have only for that purpose.

*: The abortion of a woman they describe by an horse kicking a wolf; because a mare will cast her foal if she tread in the track of that animal.

*: One copy of the magnificent caveman, The Thinker, of which Rodin cast several examples in bronze, is seated now in front of the Detroit Museum of Art, where it was placed last autumn.

*: Stuff is said to cast or warp when...it alters its flatness or straightness.

: ux|en|Casting is generally an indication of bad design.

*: He clambered on to an apron of rock that held its area out to the sun and began to cast across it. The direction of the wind changed and the scent touched him again.

*: a cast of dreadful dust

: The area near the stream was covered with little bubbly worm casts.

: He’s in the cast of Oliver.

: The cast was praised for a fine performance.

: The men got into position for the cast, two at the ladle, two with long rods, all with heavy clothing.

: The cast would need a great deal of machining to become a recognizable finished part.

: The doctor put a cast on the boy’s broken arm.

: A plaster cast was made of his face.

*: As when a cast of Faulcons make their flight / An an Herneshaw, that lyes aloft on wing […].

*: The image of the affected eye is clearer and in consequence the diplopy more striking the less the cast of the eye; hence the double vision will be noticed by the patient before the misdirection of the eye attracts the attention of those about him.

*: Arriving in Brittany, the Woodville exiles found a sallow young man, with dark hair curled in the shoulder-length fashion of the time and a penchant for expensively dyed black clothes, whose steady gaze was made more disconcerting by a cast in his left eye – such that while one eye looked at you, the other searched for you.

: Her features had a delicate cast to them.

*: I have read all her articles and come to admire both her elegant turn of phrase and the noble cast of mind which inspires it; but never, I confess, did I look to see beauty and wit so perfectly united.

: In English, the verb to be is conjugated as follows: I am, you are, he/she/it is, we are, you are, they are.

*: The effects of hunger were often conjugated with epidemic disease.

*: We have learned, in logic, that conjugates are sometimes in name only, and not in deed.

: That salesman was able to persuade me into buying this bottle of lotion.

*: We will persuade him, be it possible.

*: The boy became volubly friendly and bubbling over with unexpected humour and high spirits. He tried to persuade Cicely to stay away from the ball-room for a fourth dance. Nobody would miss them, he explained.

*: Hearken not unto Hezekiah, when he persuadeth you.

*: He persuaded me to go home, but I refused.

*: Beloved, we are persuaded better things of you.

*: ...she took it down, looked long and fondly at it, then, shaking her curls about her face, as if to hide the act, pressed it to her lips and seemed to weep over it in an uncontrollable paroxysm of tender grief.

*: ... the backs of their necks and their forelegs are decorated with curls and their necks and bodies are covered with fine, undulating lines.

*: It is possible to use the wind which blows from the left to the right by playing well into the wind with the slightest bit of curl on the ball […]

*: Now do a curl and an overhead press, keeping your palms facing in.

*: In 2D, when Q is a polygonal domain, the singularities of Type (2) disappear because ? is the scalar curl of u and is such that its vectorial curl is zero.

: ux|en|The curl of the vector field \vec{F}=(xyz,xyz,xyz) is the vector field \vec{\nabla}\times\vec{F}=(xz-xy,xy-yz,yz-xz).

*: These potatoes, however, planted the next year, have a fair yield, untouched by the curl.

: ux|en|The one-piece back is of a medium curl.

*: He picked the ball up about forty yards out on the left wing, left a trail of Arsenal defenders in his wake, and curled the ball round Geoff Barnett as he came right out into the far corner.

*: She curls her spine; she wedges a pillow between her knees.

*: It seemed to me that Mr. St. Johns under lip protruded, and his upper lip curled a moment.

*: Clouds curled down from the mountains.

*: The ball curled to a stop within six inches of the hole.

: ux|en|I curl at my local club every weekend.

*: When curling the weight, bring the barbell up toward the chin, then return it to its starting position. Keep your elbows and upper arms as immobile as possible to isolate the biceps.

*: Curl their locks with bodkins and with braid.

*: There was also hairdressing: hairdressing, too, really was hairdressing in those times — no running a comb through it and that was that. It was curled, frizzed, waved, put in curlers overnight, waved with hot tongs;nb....

*: Thicker than the snaky locks / That curled Megaera.

*: Curling with metaphors a plain intention.

*: Seas would be pools without the brushing air / To curl the waves.

: get the hump, have the hump, take the hump., give someone the hump.

: That guy is such a hump!

*: The cattle were very uncomfortable, standing humped up in the bushes.

: ux|en|Stop humping the table, you sicko.

: If you bend the pipe too far, it will break.

: Don’t bend your knees.

: Look at the trees bending in the wind.

*: Bend thine ear to supplication.

*: Towards Coventry bend we our course.

*: bending her eyes ... upon her parent

: The road bends to the right

*: to whom our vows and wishes bend

: He bent down to pick up the pieces.

*: Each to his great Father bends.

: They bent me to their will.

*: except she bend her humour

: I am bending to my desire to eat junk food.

: He bent the companys resources to gaining market share.

*: to bend his mind to any public business

*: when to mischief mortals bend their will

: He bent to the goal of gaining market share.

: Bend the sail to the yard.

: You should bend the G slightly sharp in the next measure.

*: I hear the train a comin/Its rolling round the bend

: ux|en|Theres a sharp bend in the road ahead.

: ux|en|A diver who stays deep for too long must ascend very slowly in order to prevent the bends.

*: Farewell, poor swain; thou art not for my bend.

: the midship bends

*: It is also pertinent to note that the current obvious decline in work on holarctic hepatics most surely reflects a current obsession with cataloging and with nomenclature of the organisms—as divorced from their study as living entities.

: ux|en|The dollar has declined rapidly since 2001.

: ux|en|My health declined in winter.

*: in melancholy deep, with head declined

*: And now fair Phoebus gan decline in haste / His weary wagon to the western vale.

*: You have declined his means.

*: He knoweth his error, but will not seek to decline it.

: a line that declines from straightness

: conduct that declines from sound morals

*: Yet do I not decline from thy testimonies.

*: Could I decline this dreadful hour?

: ux|en|On reflection I think I will decline your generous offer.

*: after the first declining of a noun and a verb

: rfquotek|Shakespeare

*: The team chose to decline the fifteen-yard penalty because their receiver had caught the ball for a thirty-yard gain.